Helena – Mother. Empress. Saint.

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by old49er, Jan 14, 2018.

  1. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    Hi all, I find these AE late Roman Bronze interesting and very affordable for the newer Ancient Coin collector like myself. These coins are drenched with History and it's fun to learn the interesting stories these coins can tell.
    Helena, or Saint Helena (Greek: Ἁγία Ἑλένη, Hagía Helénē, Latin: Flavia Iulia Helena Augusta; c. 250 – c. 330), was an Empress of the Roman Empire, and mother of Emperor Constantine the Great. Born in Drepana, Bithynia in Asia Minor, she became the consort of the future Roman Emperor Constantius Chlorus (reigned 293–306) and the mother of the future Emperor Constantine the Great (reigned 306–337). She ranks as an important figure in the history of Christianity and of the world due to her major influence on her son. In her final years, she made a religious tour of Syria Palaestina and Jerusalem, during which she allegedly discovered the True Cross. Pious beliefs also associate her to the foundation of the Vatican Gardens. helena 003.JPG helena 007.JPG
    Helena

    A.D. 328- 329

    18x19mm 3.4gm

    FL HELENA AVGVSTA; diademed and draped bust right.

    SECVRITAS REIPVBLICE; Securitas standing left, lowering branch, raising robe with right hand.

    In ex. SMNΓ



    RIC VII Nicomedia 159

    [​IMG]http://www.romeacrosseurope.com/?p=3379#sthash.3qkw3JxA.dpbs Feel free to share any you have. Would love to see them.
     
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  3. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    [​IMG]
    Helena (324 - 330 A.D)
    Æ3
    O: FL HELENA AVGVSTA, Draped bust right.
    R: SECVRITAS-REIPVBLICE, Securitas standing left.
    Siscia Mint, 5th offcina
    19mm
    2.8g
    RIC 218
     
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  4. TIF

    TIF Always learning.

    Nice coin! Definitely a lot of bang for the buck with the Constantine and later Roman coins.

    One of these days I too want to get one of Helena, who is possibly the first Crazy Cat Lady :)
     
  5. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Here's a posthumous issue by the sons of Constantine I commemorating the two wives (Helena and Theodora) of Constantius I (AD 305-306), their paternal grandfather. Helena died about eight years before this coin was issued. It's tiny.


    Helena PAX PVBLICA Reduced Centenionalis Trier.jpg Helena, Augusta AD 324-228/30
    Roman billon reduced centenionalis; 1.24 g, 13.4 mm
    Trier, AD 337-340
    Obv: FL IVL HELENAE AVG diademed and draped bust, right
    Rev: PAX PVBLICA, Pax standing left, holding olive branch and transverse scepter; in exergue TR S
    Refs: RIC viii, p. 144, 78; LRBC I 119; Cohen 4; RCV 17492.
     
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  6. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    Definitely an interesting character from the 4th century

    Here's the one I have minted at Heraclea

    [​IMG]
    Helena, AE3 Heraclea mint, 5th officina
    FL HELENA AVGVSTA, draped and diademed bust right
    SECVRITAS REIPVBLICE, Helena standing left, holding branch and raising her dress. dot SMHE dot at exergue
    2.9 gr
    Ref : Cohen # 12, LRBC # 879

    Q
     
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  7. panzerman

    panzerman Well-Known Member

    Beautifull coins everyone, thanks for sharing:) I am doing my workout(weights) while bidding on Spink Auction, usually do not multi-task. Working out OK this morning:) By days ends, I will be lighter in body weight/ and the wallet.
     
  8. Roman Collector

    Roman Collector Well-Known Member

    Same issue, same mint, same officina:

    Helena SECVRITAS REIPVBLICE Nicomedia Centenionalis.jpg
     
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  9. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    She also commissioned a chapel to be built on the site of the burning bush on the flanks of Mt. Sinai. I visited a few years back and climbed the steps of repentance (over 3,000 steps) which takes you to the top of Mt. Sinai. The fortified structure is dated between 527-565 (Justinian's time). See below...

    helena.jpg

    Also, great coins everyone!
     
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  10. benhur767

    benhur767 Sapere aude

    Thank you to the OP for sharing his cool coin and also for some historical background. I agree: LRBCs are relatively inexpensive in proportion to the amount of visual and historical interest attached to them. Here's my Helena, also with SECVRITAS REIPVBLICE reverse:
    hel_mk_2016_0925_01.jpg
    Helena (mother of Constantine I); c. 250–330 CE (Augusta 306–30 CE). Æ3, Antioch mint, struck c. 327–8 CE; 20mm, 3.58g, 6h. C 12, cf. LRBC 1355 (SMANTA mintmark), RIC VII 80b (R5), Sear 16227. Obv: FL HELENA AVGVSTA; diademed and mantled bust right, wearing earrings and necklace. Rx: SECVRITAS – REIPVBLICE; Securitas standing left, lowering branch with right hand, raising hem of robe with left hand; SMANTB in exergue. Very rare with this mintmark, more common with • [dot] SMANTB.

    From the Elvira E. Clain-Stefanelli Collection (misidentified by seller as from Heraclea mint but with SMANTI mintmark [Antioch]).
     
    Last edited: Jan 14, 2018
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  11. LaCointessa

    LaCointessa Well-Known Member

    Beautiful St. Helenas, everyone. I will not even show the Helena coin which I found in a group of crusties and have not worked on since my cleaning skills improved. I'll enjoy your coins until I get my Helena tidied up. But I do have this St. Helena. It is a 2" x 3" (approx) prayer card.

    Also, she is called St. Elena on the card.



    Helena Prayer Card.png
     
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  12. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

  13. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

  14. LaCointessa

    LaCointessa Well-Known Member

    Yes. she does @Cucumbor. Poetic license, perhaps? Now that you mention it, almost all the 'ancient' saints in my prayer card collection are beautiful and youthful looking. Only the more modern saints are realistic as to age and beauty. St. Helena could not have possibly looked as youthful as she appears on this card at the time she purportedly discovered the "True Cross."
     
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  15. chrsmat71

    chrsmat71 I LIKE TURTLES!

    I got one!


    helenasecuritasD_zpsjjkkppgk.jpg

    Helena, Mother of Constantine I. AE Follis, 325-330 AD

    O: FL HELENA AVGVSTA, Pearl-diademed and mantled bust right, wearing necklace. R:SECVRITAS REIPVBLICE, Securitas standing left, holding branch pointing down; ∙ΓSIS in ex., Siscia mint, RIC 204. 20 mm, 2.6g
     
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  16. David@PCC

    David@PCC allcoinage.com

    NF means Nobilissima Femina which is a very high title also given to her daughter in law Fausta. These were only struck at Thessalonica.
    ri213.jpg
    Helena
    318 to 319 AD
    Mint: Thessalonica
    AE Follis
    Obvs: HELENA N F, bare head right, waved hair, mantled.
    Revs: Laurel wreath enclosing eight pointed star.
    17x18mm, 3.05g
    Ref: RIC VII.505.50, Vagi 2898
     
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  17. Gary Waddingham

    Gary Waddingham Well-Known Member

    Constantine and Helena were the first saints of the Christian church. Here is the reverse of a gold hyperpyron of Alexius III (1195-1203) showing St. Constantine next to Alexius holding the patriarchal cross. Note to the left of St. Constantine you can see the O with a dot in it for "O hagios" or "saint" and the "K" and "W" (omega) of Constantine. stconstantine.jpg
     
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  18. old49er

    old49er Well-Known Member

    Great coins everyone, Thanks for sharing them! :)
     
  19. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    Nice @old49er ! These are cool affordable little nuggets of history...

    My Helena:

    upload_2018-1-17_14-58-52.png
    RI Helena mother Constantine AE Follis Securitas Nicomedia mint 325-326 CE 19mm 3.3g RIC-95 Sear 16619
     
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